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Going and Growing Organization: The Hart-Cluett House, a Home of
Our Own, 1952-1975
In
1948, Albert E. Cluett and his wife, Caroline Ide Cluett, challenged
the Historical Society, now 20 years old, to raise sufficient
funds to support the operation of their Troy townhouse as a museum.
In 1952, the building was turned over to the Society by Mrs. Cluett
after a successful campaign was completed. RCHS had a building
with great potential as a historic house museum and repository
for the county's historical artifacts and archival materials.
Collecting began in earnest. By the mid-1950s, it had become clear
to the Trustees that professional help was needed to bring their
vision of a museum to reality. In 1957, H. Maxson Holloway, formerly
a Curator at the New-York Historical Society and other prestigious
museums, was hired as the Society's first director. Holloway's
immediate plans included the careful acquisition of fine and decorative
arts as well as period furnishings to fill the fourteen rooms
of the house. The slow process of raising money and acquiring
objects continued over a decade. The highlights of this effort
were objects and furnishings from the Hart and Cluett families
and their descendants, such as the Hart family dining room chairs,
circa 1816 and furnishings from the master bedroom of Albert and
Caroline Cluett, which were "returned" to the house.
At the same time that the museum collections grew
in number, the library and archival collections expanded to include
local business records, genealogical information, and personal
papers. Educational programs and exhibitions were held in the
Hart-Cluett House's converted carriage house. Upon the death of
Max Holloway in 1967, a successor was soon appointed. The second
director, Archie Strobie, also trained in the museum profession,
hired the Society's first Curator, Marcia Starkey, in 1968, to
catalogue and preserve its diverse and growing collections. In
1970, Breffny Walsh, a graduate of the Cooperstown Graduate Program
in Museum Studies, became RCHS's third director and made significant
progress for the institution during the next 20 years. One of
her first tasks was to guide the organization through its first
accreditation by the American Association of Museums in 1972.
While the Hart-Cluett House and the museum collections
were growing, other areas of the organization's mission were also
being addressed. Once the house was opened to the public in 1953,
a number of other groups met and had programs at the site. In
1954, the Junior League approached RCHS with the idea of using
the basement level for a children's museum. From 1954 to 1959,
the Junior Museum operated at RCHS, often using the carriage house
space as well. Local artists also met for classes in rooms in
the house, as did the Birchkill Arts and Crafts Guild, until the
establishment of the Rensselaer County Council for the Arts in
the early 1960s. In 1972, the Hudson-Mohawk Industrial Gateway
was founded by members of RCHS's Preservation Committee to focus
on the rich industrial history of the area. As historic preservation
became an issue in the community and the nation, RCHS took an
active position in favor of preserving the built environment.
There were many battles to fight as the pressures of suburbanization,
the loss of Troy's heavy industry and beginnings of urban renewal
programs became a part of daily life.
Proceed to Beyond
the House: The Acquisition of 57 Second Street and the Impact
of America's Bicentennial, 1976-1996
Proceed to The
Dawn of a New Century, 1996 to present
Return to Keeping
Green the Memory of Pioneer Days in Rensselaer County: The Early
Years of RCHS, 1927-1952
Return to Introduction
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